Successive independence and behavioral contrast in a closed economy. |
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Authors: | K G White B Alsop A P McLean |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand. |
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Abstract: | Two pigeons had access to multiple concurrent schedules of reinforcement for 24 hours per day in their home cages. The variable-interval schedules comprising the multiple concurrent schedules were varied across 16 conditions. In three sets of conditions, one schedule was varied while its concurrent alternative and the concurrent schedules in the other component were held constant. Behavioral contrast was observed; that is, as the rate of reinforcement arranged by the varied schedule decreased, response rates on the constant schedules typically increased. These conditions formed part of two larger sets of conditions in which the concurrent schedules in one multiple-schedule component remained constant while the concurrent schedules in the other component were varied. Successive independence was found, in that behavior allocation during the constant component did not vary as a function of the reinforcer ratios in the varied component. Successive independence between components in multiple concurrent schedules is a robust result that occurs in closed economies and under conditions that promote behavioral contrast. |
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Keywords: | closed economy successive independence behavioral contrast variable-interval schedules multiple concurrent schedules key peck pigeon |
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